COURSES: Description

LIVE Instruction, the real time interaction between Instructor and Student is the basis of our training model. Shelle Aviation has successfully employed this training method over the last two decades. Our owner has 40 years of experience in both aviation and technical training and has directed that Live Instruction will continue to be the corner stone of our training model.

This is the kind of training experience we all look for, getting down to the business of preparing for the exams. We'll guide you through every step of the process, and bring you up-to-speed with all of the relevant testing information, so that you can focus on passing your tests. We do the research, provide the training, put the class together, explain the references, connect you with the testing centers, the examiners, etc., and we do it all face-to-face, LIVE, and now via the Internet.

Traditionally LIVE Instruction or training has been held in a building, requiring both students and instructor to travel to and from that location for every class. We now deliver LIVE training via the World Wide Web. All that a student needs to fully participate in a class is an Internet connection, and the average personal computer. Students see, hear, and experience all of the instruction, examples, diagrams, charts, illustrations, training aids, and class discussion that they would in a traditional classroom setting, without the hassle of driving, traffic, weather, parking, etc.

Many industries are moving to this technology, here is one great example:

The UCLA Medical Center is using a Robot named RP6 to allow Doctors in the ICU there to perform their rounds, "visiting" post-operative patients, even brain surgery patients, to ensure that they are progressing properly in their recovery. The RP6 unit is remote controlled and moves throughout the ICU, visiting patients in their beds. The unit has a computer monitor, a small camera, and an audio transceiver, which allows Doctors to interact with patients and actually talk with them while giving them tasks to perform which display how well they are recovering. Both the doctor and the person at the "other" location (with the RP6 unit) can see and hear one another, and interact normally as if the doctor was standing at the patients bedside. In some instances up to 30 kilometers have separated doctor and patient. Doctors drive the RP6 throughout the hospital using a joystick, allowing them to see, hear, and interact with anyone in the hospital, both patients and staff, and to do it all in real time.

Dr. Wang is from the "In Touch Health" company, he designed the RP6, and there are more than 50 of these type units already working in hospitals in the US and other countries. Dr Wang says it is like “Star Trek” and "Beam me up Scotty", allowing them to "beam" a doctor anywhere instantly. “You essentially have a live interaction, which comes close to letting you be in two places at once”.